- Location
- Washington Heights, NY
Please do not rely on your sandbed to buffer your tank enough for corals without supplementation of alkalinity and calcium in some form. This is not okay and sand alone will not be able to provide enough calc/alk to sustain those corals.
E,
The situation Randy speaks about is with few corals in a tank. Even then he says it might be possible. The buffering he talks about here is from the dissolving aragonite from the lower regions of the sandbed where its possible for the pH to be much lower than the rest of the tank. But even this small buffering doesn't take into account the alkalinity drawn from the sandbed itself. Nothing personal, but relying only on the sandbed for alkalinity is not a good way to run a reef tank and I don't think it should be recommended to new reefers. Is this how you run your reef, you don't have to supplement?
Here are a few more post I found when I did the search.
http://www.reefcentral.com/forums/showthread.php?s=&threadid=727126
http://www.reefcentral.com/forums/showthread.php?s=&threadid=670768
Paul,
I think there is a misunderstanding here. The focus of my response was not to belittle your post, I apologize if you took that personally, not sure why you felt I was talking about something you said in particular. I was merely stating what I saw as the point of the thread and addressing your rebutt by clarifying what I was talking about.
In referring to Randy's post, despite the fact that he makes a blanket claim that aragonite buffers nothing, the article he sources actually says this at the end, in the section titled:
Recommended Uses for Calcium Carbonate
In a tank with a low calcification rate, such as one with few corals or with mostly slow-growing corals, you might even get away with this method alone. The cost associated with even the commercial products will be fairly low, and using Southdown sand will be almost nonexistent. Still, it may be adequate to maintain pH, alkalinity, and calcium in such situations. Moreover, it will never (or almost never) become unbalanced the way separate additions of calcium and alkalinity might become over time.
So while I definitely acknowledge that Randy Holmes Farley is an undoubted expert and far more knowledgeable than either of us (with regard to marine tank chemisty), I would say that the source he uses actually recommends the use of aragonite sand in some situations (with corals) as an option to buffer.
However, if you feel that the statement made earlier is the end all be all to this topic, I respect your choice.
Great article by the way. Still can't understand half of what Randy says though, lol.
E
E,
The situation Randy speaks about is with few corals in a tank. Even then he says it might be possible. The buffering he talks about here is from the dissolving aragonite from the lower regions of the sandbed where its possible for the pH to be much lower than the rest of the tank. But even this small buffering doesn't take into account the alkalinity drawn from the sandbed itself. Nothing personal, but relying only on the sandbed for alkalinity is not a good way to run a reef tank and I don't think it should be recommended to new reefers. Is this how you run your reef, you don't have to supplement?
Here are a few more post I found when I did the search.
http://www.reefcentral.com/forums/showthread.php?s=&threadid=727126
http://www.reefcentral.com/forums/showthread.php?s=&threadid=670768